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Here come Chinese cars (Detroit alert!)
Business Week ^ | 09 june 2005 | Business week

Posted on 06/11/2005 6:46:30 AM PDT by voletti

Korean cars gave Detroit fits in the late '90s by undercutting domestic small cars on price and outdoing them on quality -- then moving up into other segments. Autos from China could provide more lower-cost competition for the Big Three at a time when GM and Ford Motor Co. (F ) are already reeling. That could cost them, along with Chrysler (DCX ), more market share and prod them to move more of their own production offshore.

How fast can the Chinese gear up? The way things are going, it won't take 20 years to match Toyota Motor Corp. (TM ) quality levels, as it did for the Koreans. And with Chinese auto assembly workers earning $2 an hour -- vs. $22 in Korea and nearly $60 in the U.S. for wages and benefits -- it may not be long before China has the wherewithal to start selling competitively priced cars overseas. "The Chinese are probably five or six years away from being able to sell a competent low-end car," says auto analyst Maryann N. Keller.

The Chinese government is putting its heft behind the export push -- subsidizing the export drive of such local players as Chery and giving the likes of Honda big incentives. Beijing also is nudging foreign auto makers to divert investment into export production so local partners can become familiar with managing foreign-exchange risk and global supply chains. It's also pushing domestic companies such as Chery, Geely Auto, Brilliance China Automotive (CBA ), and Shanghai Automotive Industry to develop their own brands overseas.

(Excerpt) Read more at businessweek.com ...


TOPICS: Business/Economy; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: automakers; china; turass
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To: AlaskaErik
Say what you want about Kia, but I just hit 20k miles without any problems whatsoever.
Almost 140K on a '94 Chevy Caprice.

Lemme know when you reach that point (I'll be around!)

181 posted on 06/11/2005 7:30:20 PM PDT by _Jim (<--- Ann C. and Rush L. speak on gutless Liberals (RealAudio files))
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To: A. Pole

If it wasn't for the free market, you'd be driving the 2005 equivalent of a Chevy Citation.


182 posted on 06/11/2005 7:31:04 PM PDT by 1rudeboy
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To: A. Pole
The efforts of the working men should be seen as something noble, as creative activity of their minds, bodies and souls. They should not be forced into subsistence level by the merciless competition.

I'm with ya, buddy! I think a lot of the times, people who do not see or understand what you just posted are just as guilty of class warfare as Karl Marx is. In short, I do see a lot of the "Ayn Rand," free trader types as sort of the different side of the same coin where Marx is heads and Rand is tails. In a way, they bring it upon themselves, Marx is wrong but I don't deny that his works were a counter reaction to the abuses of the time. You have a choice between the two of getting shot in the left or right hand basically. Put it another way, they both see human beings as a commodity, a resource and ignore the spiritual aspects of all of this.
183 posted on 06/11/2005 7:31:58 PM PDT by Nowhere Man (Lutheran, Conservative, Neo-Victorian/Edwardian, Michael Savage in '08! - DeCAFTA-nate CAFTA!)
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To: philetus
Cars will sell in the range of $7,000 to $11,000.

No doubt these cars should be selling in the 1500-2000 dollar range which would still give China a healthy profit...However, our 'Free Trading Americans' figure they will price them the same as American cars of the same size, style, etc...

Just a little more robbery that we are getting used to...

184 posted on 06/11/2005 7:33:49 PM PDT by Iscool (You mess with me, you mess with the WHOLE trailer park!!!)
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To: LibWhacker
Power grows out of the barrel of a carburetor.
Those vehicles barreling down the autohbahn doing 160 KMH aren't running 'carbs'; carbs are rude, crude and obnoxious and distribute fuel unevenly cylinder to cylinder (among a WHOLE host of other problems and shortcomings) ...
185 posted on 06/11/2005 7:34:42 PM PDT by _Jim (<--- Ann C. and Rush L. speak on gutless Liberals (RealAudio files))
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To: 1rudeboy
If it wasn't for the free market, you'd be driving the 2005 equivalent of a Chevy Citation.

The Citation wasn't such a bad car, I remember we used those for driver's ed in the early 1980's. Also, my friend's parents had one, well the Pontiac version of it, I think it was the Phoenix, it did quite well, IIRC. Plus the radio was neat, it was up and down instead of left and right. It was the "first new Chevy of the Eighties," I remember the commercials. I admit I have a soft spot for the 1950's/1960's/1970's era American, land yachts, to me, they were the best cars.
186 posted on 06/11/2005 7:36:00 PM PDT by Nowhere Man (Lutheran, Conservative, Neo-Victorian/Edwardian, Michael Savage in '08! - DeCAFTA-nate CAFTA!)
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To: nyconse; Doohickey

Do people realize what kind of impact of the demise of the American auto industry would have on our economy?

St Paul Pioneer Press, June 5, 2005

"No other single industry is linked to as much of U.S. manufacturing or generates as much retail business and employment," the center reported. (Center for Automotive Research) Despite stepped up foreign competitiion, the U.S motor vehicle industry remains the largest in the world.

The study found that the U.S. auto industry adds $292,000 per worker to the value of the products it produced. That compares with $120,000 for all of U.S. manufacturing. Only two other industries - beverage/tobacco and petroleum/coal - do better; both employ far fewer workers than the motor vehicle industry.


187 posted on 06/11/2005 7:44:21 PM PDT by Lijahsbubbe
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To: Iscool

No one who is truly free has to belong to a "union shop." As to the illegal aliens they have LULAC, MALDEF, ACLU and others who take the place of unions in representing them. I'm still waiting for someone to describe what unions in the US have done for "the workers" other than take their money for political purposes and help price jobs out of the country.


188 posted on 06/11/2005 7:46:37 PM PDT by FreePaul
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To: nyconse
A number of great American industries have been destroyed-steel industry, electronic industry and garment industry to name a few....add the furniture industry to that!
189 posted on 06/11/2005 7:48:50 PM PDT by SweetCaroline (Don't let aging get you down. It's too hard to get back up.....MAXINE)
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To: InterceptPoint
American workers are the best in the world but they are not now and never will be the least expensive.

Thank you.(although I'm not so sure about the "never will be")

190 posted on 06/11/2005 7:56:27 PM PDT by Lijahsbubbe
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To: iconoclast
The only tools the American worker is destined to need are hamburger flippers and bed pans.
Whoa!

Talk about 'smug, baseless arrogance'!

I suggest that with the proper 'ed-u-ka-shun' and ability and will the American worker can be making better use of his time and mental capacity than any other human being in any other country!

191 posted on 06/11/2005 7:56:55 PM PDT by _Jim (<--- Ann C. and Rush L. speak on gutless Liberals (RealAudio files))
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To: Iscool

For one thing, China's application of taxes on cars does not follow international practices. The price of a locally manufactured saloon car includes 17 percent VAT, 3-8 percent excise, 10 percent purchase tax, as well as import tax on accessories and local tax. This means that 30-40 percent of the purchase price goes on tax of various kinds. As to imported cars, taxes constitute 60 percent of a car purchase price.LOL


192 posted on 06/11/2005 8:36:55 PM PDT by philetus (What goes around comes around)
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To: Iscool
And still, American industry has been and IS still leaving for China from those states...Nice try though...,

If so, certainly not as fast. I've worked in both open shop and union states and the difference on the shop floor in productivity is incredible. These states (predominately in the south but not all) are the ones garnering the most of foreign investment in this country. Those investors aren't stupid.

BTW Toyodas and Hondas don't cost anymore to build in this country. They sell for more because the consumer perceives more value. The UAW will kill off the entire American auto industry.

193 posted on 06/11/2005 8:41:08 PM PDT by Last Dakotan
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To: Nowhere Man; 1rudeboy
Not surprised to see that comment after your previous post about the TV sets. Let's see, the 600 pre-Carter inflation dollars you paid for that 1971 Zenith would be about
3,000 dollars in today's money. Today that amount of money will buy you a 40+ inch diagonal flat screen HD TV with a picture that is like looking out a window. I will never comprehend people who act like progress is a bad thing.
194 posted on 06/11/2005 8:54:11 PM PDT by ExcelJockey
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To: ExcelJockey

Forget the 21st century baubles and trinkets you have to distract you (and your children -- who'd be better off getting a classical education) and think about property as a fraction of your salary.


195 posted on 06/11/2005 10:07:20 PM PDT by John Filson
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To: andy58-in-nh; A. Pole; ex-snook
Capitalists do not view labor as evil, nor do they view it as a commodity....
People who offer their services in a free market are not slaves or servants - they are traders....
People who take risks that others do not, and work harder than others do, and make better choices and plan more effectively than other people are entitled to the fruits of their labors. To involuntarily deprive them of such, (as is most often accomplished in this world by threat of force) is to enslave them.

As I understand it, you have mistakingly framed the arguement as one of individual rights: capitalist's rights vs. labor rights... That oversimplification ignores the fact that We the People have legislated an economic disparity by granting capitalists the privilege of limited personal liability when they pool their resources through the act of incorporation.

We the People extend this privilege with the expectation that the resultant economies of scale for commercial investment and growth will benefit all. However, when corporate activities become detrimental to our populace, We the People have the right to impose corrective measures.


196 posted on 06/11/2005 10:07:28 PM PDT by Willie Green ("Some people march to a different drummer - and some people polka")
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To: andy58-in-nh
profit is good.

This can not be repeated often enough. When you assemble labor, capital, marketing, energy etc. and the end result is greater than the sum of these parts, you have profit. When you assemble these things and the result is less than the sum of these parts, you have loss.

PROFIT IS GOOD, LOSS IS BAD.

197 posted on 06/11/2005 10:09:17 PM PDT by staytrue
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To: John Filson

When you assemble labor, capital, marketing, energy etc. and the end result is greater than the sum of these parts, you have profit. When you assemble these things and the result is less than the sum of these parts, you have loss.

PROFIT IS GOOD, LOSS IS BAD.


198 posted on 06/11/2005 10:14:07 PM PDT by staytrue
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To: staytrue

Profit at the expense of American strategic security (economic, reproductive, intellectual, and military) for firms, many of which are owned by the enemy or non-Americans, or often at best Americans who are truly anti-Americans at heart, is a net loss for the United States of America.

If you don't understand that, I pity you. If you don't understand that we are losing ground on all of these fronts at this very moment, you're as blind as can be.

The free market works only when the enemy can't buy into it. Today, he's owning more and more of it. But there's plenty of profit to be made selling America out. Just check the financials and see for yourself.


199 posted on 06/11/2005 10:22:22 PM PDT by John Filson
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To: A. Pole
Have you ever considered the possibility that you made a wrong turn in cyberspace?

Labor is a commodity. It has value that may be traded or bartered; or stolen if Socialists are involved. It always has and always will. Your argument is akin to saying that lumber isn't a commodity because lumber comes from trees and "trees are special".
200 posted on 06/11/2005 10:45:08 PM PDT by Redcloak (We'll raise up our glasses against evil forces singin' "whiskey for my men and beer for my horses!")
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